Abstract

Compared to Freud’s use of six sessions a week, the frequency of therapy has now decreased to a maximum of three or four sessions. The current field of applied psychoanalysis using only one or two sessions a week is of much higher relevance for the worldwide supply of the population with psychotherapy. Not only frequency and duration have decreased over the years but also the sum of applied sessions per patient. This is especially the case in psychodynamic short term psychotherapy. With the change in frequency a change in therapy technique took place resulting in a more active and attentive therapist, an interactive pattern with more dialogue and an avoidance of regressive movements of the patient. The crucial role concerning the work with transference and resistance was maintained in tendency but the specific techniques also underwent modifications. The empirical state of psychodynamic psychotherapy is better than it used to be but further studies are urgently needed.